WTF? Apple has no business doing that. Here we go, Orwell’s 1984, big brother censoring us, telling us how to tho think and speak efin sickening. What next? Censoring what kind of pictures we can take with our phones?

You can manually set that word in the title if you want. This isn’t censorship, it’s not having such words in the dictionary so it doesn’t incorrectly suggest it to a 6 year old. The only sure way to avoid doing that, is not knowing the word.

The word Fuck is indeed very unsafe… it leads to population increase.. which leads exhaustion of resources, pollution of the planet….name it ….And finally annihilation of the spices… After which all of the above is a moot point anyway .

Kudos tomApple, they are actually saving our Spicies ! Yee haaa !

Is there one kid, in the real world who does not know this word….

If Apple want to express their concerns.. dont censor.. give an option in setting to block profanities and sexually related word.
Those who are concerned can flick a password protected switch on on their kids devices and problem is solved.
But to impose on everybody… … ‘1984’

Oh, for fuck’s sake, people!
What a bunching of shitty snowflakes.
Apple is not preventing us from putting profanity into our notes (or note titles), it is merely declining to SUGGEST that as a note title. As someone pointed out, they probably deliberately don’t have those words in their suggestion dictionary (or however that works) so that they don’t accidentally suggest profanity when the person meant to type something other than profanity.

Back when auto-correct was changing “fucking” to “ducking,” it made sense to criticize Apple. They shouldn’t censor what we type. But it doesn’t make sense to criticize them for being cautious about suggesting profanity to us.

Way back in the 1980s I had a small software company that developed a spelling checker for the Apple II. My employee asked me if we should be swear words in the dictionary. I said “why not, we don’t want to mark them as spelled incorrectly if someone uses them…” I was proudly displaying the software to some friends at the Apple booth and I typed “cant” instead of “can’t”. Among the suggestions was “cunt.” Needless to say, I had the employee nix the use of swear words in the dictionary files (today, of course, we’d just flag such words as “not suggestible.” However, given memory limitations of the time, the extra memory and CPUc cycles to do this made it a non-starter).